GeoDaze 2014 was made possible by generous donations from SONSHINE EXPLORATION

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GeoDaze 2014 was made possible by generous
donations from
SONSHINE EXPLORATION
BALFOUR HOLDINGS, Inc.
INDIVIDUALS
Megan L. Anderson
Gerard and Byoung Sun
Beaudoin
Thomas H. Biggs
Elwood and Della Brooks
Carlotta Chernoff
Jean Cline
Gary and LeeAnn Colgan
Michael and Marian Fellows
Gregg Garfin
Terrence M. Gerlach and A.
Litasi-Gerlach
Christopher Greenhoot
John M. Guilbert and Dorothy J.
Harelson
James and Diane Hays
John Hoelle
Gary and Yvonne Huckleberry
Owen Hurd
William Willis Jenney, Jr.
Richard D. Jones
Peter L. Kresan
Michael Kutney and Sarah Tindall
Robert and Barbara Laughon
Naomi Levin
John R. Matis
Stephanie McAfee and Adam
Csank
Leslie D. McFadden
Norman M. Meader
Nancy and Charles Naeser
Sara Lynn Peyton and Richard J.
Bottjer
Richard and Martha Pfirman
Dr. Bernard Pipkin
William and Susan Purves
Miles G. Shaw
Sponsors listed as of March 27, 2014. Later sponsors will be acknowledged on
the website.
Cover photo by Luke Parsons (www.LukeParsonsPhoto.com)
WELCOME
We are pleased to welcome you to the 42st annual GeoDaze! GeoDaze is a
long-standing research symposium organized by student volunteers from the
Department of Geosciences featuring groundbreaking research from undergraduate
and graduate students. Each year, GeoDaze is made possible by generous
donations from individuals and corporate sponsors. We sincerely appreciate your
continued support!
GeoDaze allows students to present their research to an enthusiastic
audience of faculty, industry professionals, peers, and the general public. GeoDaze
collaborates with five other departments in the School of Earth and Environmental
Sciences (SEES) to bring you EarthWeek, a celebration of scientific research to
promote interdisciplinary discussion, collaboration, and exposure for all of the
participating departments. A full schedule of EarthWeek events is included on page
5 of this program. We encourage you to take advantage of all that EarthWeek has to
offer.
This year GeoDaze is proud to present 31 oral and 23 poster presentations
from Geosciences graduate and undergraduate students. The diversity of these
presentations is reflective of the Department of Geosciences’ drive to integrate earth
science research “from core to clouds”. They include research in economic geology,
tectonics and geochemistry, geophysics, paleoclimate, climate dynamics,
paleoecology, and detrital zircon geochronology. In addition, one representative from
the Department of Geosciences has been selected to participate in the EarthWeek
Plenary Session, “Scaling the World”, featuring six interdisciplinary talks by
representatives from each of the SEES departments.
GeoDaze is proud to host Dr. Stephanie Prejean from the USGS Alaska
Volcano Observatory as our keynote speaker. Dr. Prejean is a research geophysicist
and seismologist specializing in the physics of earthquake rupture with a focus on
volcanically active areas, and Association for Women Geoscientists Distinguished
Lecturer. We invite you to attend Dr. Prejean’s presentation entitled “Forecasting
Eruptions at Alaskan Volcanoes: High Stakes Science in Real Time” at 10:30 AM on
Friday, April 11th in the North Ballroom.
In accordance with tradition, many exciting “extracurricular” events will take
place during GeoDaze. The GeoDaze slide show will surely embarrass and entertain
at 11:30 AM on Friday. Soon after, our panel of faculty judges will present awards
for the best talks and posters in each session as well as the overall runner-up and
best talk award. All attendees of GeoDaze are invited to attend the GeoDaze party,
Friday evening. The margaritas will be flowing and the sunset will be beautiful at the
home of Dr. George Zandt and Dr. Susan Beck. Make sure to save some energy for
the GeoDaze field trip on Saturday. This year the trip will focus on mid-Cenozoic
deposits of the San Pedro Valley, east of Tucson. Led by Dr. Jay Quade and Alexis
Licht, this field trip will teach you about the Cenozoic paleotopographic evolution of
southern Arizona during the early phase of subsidence in the Basin and Range.
We would like to thank all of those that helped with organizing GeoDaze this
year. Without your tireless efforts GeoDaze could not be the success it is!
Shaunna Morrison and Adam Hudson
Co-Chairs, 2014 GeoDaze Symposium
2
COMMITTEE
Co-chairs…………………………………….Adam Hudson and Shaunna Morrison
Outreach…………………………………………………………..………….Phil Stokes
Audio/Video………………….…………….Drew Laskowski and Jamie Worthington
Publications…..…………………………………..Erin Harris-Parks and Kate Metcalf
Treasurer………………………………………………………………………Ted Cross
Slideshow…………………………………………………………………..Devon Orme
Field Trip…………………………………….…………..Caitlin Orem and Ryan Leary
Refreshments……………………………..…...Hector Zamora and Drew Laskowski
Webmaster…………………………………………………………………..Alissa Scire
Awards…………………………………………..Gloria Jimenez and Andrea Stevens
Correspondence…………………….…………Kat Compton and Barbara Lafuente
Registration……………………………….…....Garrison Loope and Jonathan Delph
DEPARTMENT OF GEOSCIENCES INFORMATION
Department of Geosciences
The University of Arizona
Gould-Simpson Building
1040 E. 4th Street
Tucson, AZ 85721
Phone: 520-621-6000
Fax: 520-621-2672
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
GeoDaze 2014 Donors……..…………………………………………….1
GeoDaze 2014 Welcome...………………………………………………2
GeoDaze 2014 Committee………………….……………………………3
EarthWeek Schedule………………………………….…………………..5
GeoDaze Schedule of Events
Day 1 Thursday, April 10……………………………………6-11
Economic Geology
Climate and Paleoclimate
Geophysics
GeoDaze Poster Session
Day 2 Friday, April 11………………………………………11-13
Tectonics and Geochemistry
GeoDaze Keynote Speaker
Stephanie Prejean
Slideshow
Awards and Closing Remarks
EarthWeek Plenary Poster Session
EarthWeek Oral Plenary Session “Scaling the World: Study from
Microscopic to Global Scale”
EarthWeek Keynote Speaker
Marcia McNutt
GeoDaze Dinner Party!
Maps and Directions…………………………………………………14-16
Field Trip Guide…………………………………………………..………17
Download a complete version of the GeoDaze 2014 Program with
Abstracts: http://earth.geo.arizona/geodaze/14/schedule.html
4
EarthWeek Schedule
Tuesday, April 8
Bryant Bannister Tree-Ring Building
Tuesday, April 9
Lobby
LTRR
Building Tours and Informal Talks
Wednesday-Friday, April 9-11
Student Union Memorial Center Level 3
North
Ballroom
Wednesday, April 9
Thursday, April 10
Friday, April 11
El Día del Agua
Oral Sessions
GeoDaze
Oral Sessions
GeoDaze
Oral Sessions
Poster Session
Awards and
Slideshow
EarthWeek
Plenary Session
Oral Session
Keynote:
Dr. Marcia McNutt
South
Ballroom
El Día del Agua
Lunch Address:
All Posters
Catalina
Room
SWESx
Oral Sessions
Rincon
Room
AIR
Oral Sessions
5
All Posters
GeoDaze Thursday, April 10, 2014
8:00-8:15
Welcome and Coffee
8:15-10:15 Economic Geology
SUMC North Ballroom
Session leader: Christian Rathkopf
8:15
PALEOGEOGRAPHIC AND PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS OF
IRON-OXIDE COPPER GOLD AND SEDIMENT-HOSTED COPPER
DEPOSITS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ORE-FORMING PROCESSES
Ada R. Dominguez
8:30
SCALE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF VARIABILITY IN DOLOMITE
ALTERATION AT THE TENKE-FUNGURUME CU-CO DISTRICT (TFM)
OF THE CENTRAL AFRICAN COPPERBELT
Isabel Fay
8:45
THE DISTRIBUTION OF RHENIUM CONCENTRATIONS IN
MOLYBDENITE IN ORE DEPOSITS
Christian Rathkopf
9:00
MAGMATIC FLUXES IN THE ANDEAN COASTAL BATHOLITH,
NORTHERN CHILE
James D. Girardi
9:15
EPITHERMAL MINERALIZATION ASOCIATED WITH DIATREME
BRECCIA AND RHYOLITIC DOME, LA MIEL, HAITI: PRELIMINARY
RESULTS.
Mauro Joel Melgar Pauca
9:30
THE JACKSON-LAWTON-BOWMAN NORMAL FAULT SYSTEM,
EUREKA DISTRICT, CENTRAL NEVADA
Aryn K. Hoge
9:45
NORMAL FAULTS IN THE YERINGTON DISTRICT, WESTERN
NEVADA: RECONSTRUCTIONS BASED ON NEW STRUCTURAL DATA
FROM THE ANN-MASON AND BLUE HILL AREAS
Carson Richardson
10:00 GEORGIUS AGRICOLA’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO HYDROGEOLOGY
Isabel Fay
6
10:15-10:30 BREAK
10:30-12:00 Climate and Paleoclimate
SUMC North Ballroom
Session leader: Luke Parsons
10:30 THE CONTEXT OF SOUTHWEST NORTH AMERICAN
MEGADROUGHT
Cody Routson
10:45 PATTERNS AND PROCESSES OF DROUGHT IN THE NORTHEAST
UNITED STATES
Connor Nolan
11:00 INFLUENCE OF ATLANTIC OCEAN CIRCULATION ON AMERICAN
TROPICAL RAINFALL AND CARBON BALANCE
Luke A. Parsons
11:15 U.S. NORTHEAST COAST 2009-2010 ANOMALOUS SEA LEVEL RISE
EVENT
Paul Goddard
11:30 RAPID SEA LEVEL RISE ON THE EAST COAST OF THE US
ANALYZED VIA GPS
Alexandria Will-Cole
11:45 THE MICROMORPHOLOGY OF YOUNGER DRYAS-AGED BLACK
MATS: A PALEOENVIRONMENTAL AND COMPOSITIONAL ANALYSIS
OF UNUSUAL DESERT SEDIMENTS
Erin Harris-Parks
12:00-1:00
LUNCH
1:00-2:45
Geophysics
SUMC North Ballroom
Session leader: Jamie Ryan
1:00
VARIATIONS IN LITHOSPHERIC STRUCTURE, SLAB GEOMETRY,
AND SURROUNDING MANTLE UNDER THE NORTH CENTRAL ANDES
FROM TELESEISMIC TOMOGRAPHY
Alissa Scire
7
1:15
CRUSTAL SCALE FAULTS ABOVE THE PERUVIAN AND
ARGENTINIAN FLAT SLAB SEGMENTS
Brandon T. Bishop
1:30
CRUSTAL THICKNESS OF THE CENTRAL ANDEAN PLATEAU FROM
TELESEISMIC RECEIVER FUNCTIONS
Jamie Ryan
1:45
SHEAR WAVE VELOCITY STRUCTURE OF THE ANATOLIAN PLATE;
IMPLICATIONS FOR PRE-COLLISIONAL TECTONICS
Jonathan R. Delph
2:00
PRESENT-DAY LOADING RATE OF FAULTS IN SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA AND NORTHERN BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO, AND
POST-SEISMIC DEFORMATION FOLLOWING THE M7.2 APRIL 4, 2010,
EL MAYOR-CUCAPAH EARTHQUAKE FROM GPS GEODESY
Joshua Spinler
2:15
SEISMIC IMAGING OF THE MAGMATIC UNDERPINNINGS BENEATH
THE ALTIPLANO-PUNA VOLCANIC COMPLEX FROM THE JOINT
INVERSION OF SURFACE WAVE DISPERSION AND RECEIVER
FUNCTIONS
Kevin M. Ward
2:30
INVESTIGATING CONNECTIONS BETWEEN LARGE-MAGNITUDE
EARTHQUAKES AND ACTIVE ASEISMIC CREEP ON THE ALTO
TIBERINA LOW ANGLE NORMAL FAULT, ITALY
Lily J. Jackson
2:45-3:00
BREAK
3:00-5:00
GeoDaze Poster Session
SUMC South Ballroom
Poster presentations from all GeoDaze participants will be on display during both
this session and during the Friday EarthWeek/Plenary Poster Session.
Economic Geology
G01: PALEOCLIMATE AND PALEOGEOGRAPHIC RECONSTRUCTIONS OF
SEDIMENT-HOSTED COPPER AND IRON-OXIDE COPPER GOLD
DEPOSITS: A MORE DETAILED VIEW
Emily Ryan
8
G02: U-PB GEOCHRONOLOGY OF LARAMIDE MAGMATISM RELATED TO
CU-, ZN-, AND FE- MINERALIZED SYSTEMS, CENTRAL MINING DISTRICT,
NEW MEXICO
Jason D. Mizer
G03: FE OXIDE-CU MINERALIZATION AT THE MINNESOTA AND PUMPKIN
HOLLOW DEPOSITS, YERINGTON DISTRICT, NEVADA
Simone Runyon
Climate and Paleoclimate
G04: THE SEASONALITY OF COCCIDIOIDOMYCOSIS: PREDICTING VALLEY
FEVER OUTBREAKS IN ARIZONA
Angelica Alvarez
G05: PACIFIC SEA-LEVEL VARIABILITY AND THE SURFACE WARMING
HIATUS
Cheryl Peyser
G06: THE SPECTRUM OF ASIAN MONSOON VARIABILITY
Garrison Loope
G07: TRAVERTINE FROM EGYPT’S WESTERN DESERT: A TERRESTRIAL
RECORD OF NORTH AFRICAN PALEOHYDROLOGY AND PALEOCLIMATE
DURING THE LATE PLEISTOCENE
Gloria Jimenez
G08: IMPACT OF WIND AND ICE BIASES ON SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON
AND HEAT UPTAKE
Jessica F. Rudd
G09: REVISITING THE AGE OF ZUNI SALT LAKE MAAR IN WEST-CENTRAL
NEW MEXICO
Jill Onken
G10: LOI DATA FOR TOTAL ORGANIC AND TOTAL INORGANIC CARBON IN
THE TUGEN HILLS AND WEST TURKANA REGIONS OF KENYA
Kojo Plange
G11: LAKE MALAWI SEDIMENT RECORD PROVIDES CLUES ON CLIMATE
VARIABILITY AND RESPONSE TO MOUNT TOBA SUPER-ERUPTION
Lily J. Jackson
9
G12: A SHOT IN THE DARK ON PAST CLIMATE CHANGE: ELEMENTAL
RECORDS FROM AN ARIZONA SPELEOTHEM
Louis Shanley
G13: POWER SPECTRAL ANALYSIS OF LAKE LEVELS: VARIATIONS IN
STRUCTURE AND SCALING IN LAKE LEVEL FREQUENCY SPACE
Zachary C. Williams
Geophysics
G14: INVESTIGATION INTO THE CAUSE OF A LARGE MAGNETIC ANOMALY
IN SOUTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA
Clinton Koch
G15: CAMPAIGN GPS STUDY AT JOSHUA TREE NATIONAL PARK
PROVIDES HANDS ON EXPERIENCE FOR STUDENTS AND VALUABLE
DATA FOR THE JOSHUA TREE INTEGRATIVE GPS NETWORK (JOIGN)
Harry Telajah
G16: EFFECT OF THE 2010 EL-MAYOR CUCAPAH EARTHQUAKE ON GPS
OBSERVATIONS IN THE SOUTHERN BASIN AND RANGE
James Broerman
G17: SLIP ON THE SUCKLING HILLS SPLAY FAULT DURING THE 1964
ALASKA EARTHQUAKE
Jay Chapman
G18: NEW VELOCITY ESTIMATES FROM THE PUNA ANDES GPS ARRAY
Phillip McFarland
G19: PLATE BOUNDARY ZONE DEFORMATION ASSOCIATED WITH
PANAMA-SOUTH AMERICA COLLISION USING GPS
Wadyan O. Ayyad
Tectonics and Geochemistry
G20: THERMOCHRONOLOGY OF MONTANA RIVER SANDS: IMPLICATIONS
FOR THE TIMING OF EXHUMATION OF LARAMIDE RANGES
Mariah C. Romero-Armenta
G21: DETRITAL GEOCHEMICAL FINGERPRINTS OF RIVERS ALONG THE
INDUS-YARLUNG SUTURE ZONE IN TIBET: IMPLICATIONS FOR DRAINAGE
EVOLUTION, TIMING OF ARC DEVELOPMENT AND EROSION
Mohd Faiz Hassim
10
G22: ZIRCON AGES FROM THE AMOLE ARKOSE, TUCSON MOUNTAINS
Nick Hillemeyer
G23: GEOLOGIC INVESTIGATION OF FRACTURE INTENSITY IN THE
ESCABROSA LIMESTONE AT KARTCHNER CAVERNS STATE PARK, AZ
Wesley Wilkins
GeoDaze Friday, April 11, 2014
8:00-10:15 Tectonics and Geochemistry
SUMC North Ballroom
Session leader: Kendra Murray
8:00
TECTONIC SIGNIFICANCE OF CRYSTAL-FIBER QUARTZ VEINS IN
RECREATION REDBEDS (JURASSIC), BROWN MOUNTAIN:
EXPRESSION OF CALDERA COLLAPSE IN THE TUCSON
MOUNTAINS, ARIZONA
Jean Villena-Celis, Christopher Young
8:15
PROVENANCE OF THE INDUS-YARLUNG SUTURE MÉLANGE AND
THE ONSET OF TETHYAN HIMALAYA-ASIA COLLISION, SOUTHERN
TIBET
Kathryn Metcalf
8:30
EARLY FORELAND BASIN DEPO-SYSTEMS IN THE SOUTH-CENTRAL
ANDES OF ARGENTINA, 32˚S -35˚S
Elizabeth Balgord
8:45
TWO-PHASE EXHUMATION OF SUBDUCTED INDIAN PASSIVE
MARGIN METASEDIMENTARY ROCKS IN THE LOPU KANGRI RANGE,
SOUTH-CENTRAL TIBET
Andrew Laskowski
9:00
MULTI-THERMOCHRONOLOGIC DATING OF LEUCOGRANITES
FROM THE SOUTH TIBETAN DETACHMENT SYSTEM AT RONGBUK
VALLEY, MT. EVEREST, TIBET
Devon A. Orme
9:15
THE STRUCTURE AND STRATIGRAPHY OF THE LESSER HIMALAYA
OF CENTRAL NEPAL
Edward Cross
11
9:30
TECTONIC SIGNIFICANCE OF THE GISSAR UNIT, SOUTHERN TIAN
SHAN, TAJIKISTAN
James Worthington
9:45
LATITUDINAL VARIATIONS IN ANDEAN EXHUMATION REFLECTED IN
DETRITAL APATITE FISSION RECORD OF MODERN RIVER SANDS
Andrea Stevens
10:00 OLIGOCENE LACCOLITHS ON THE COLORADO PLATEAU: A KEY TO
UNDERSTANDING CENOZOIC COOLING AND CANYON CUTTING
Kendra E. Murray
10:15-10:30 BREAK
10:30-11:30 GeoDaze Keynote Speaker
SUMC North Ballroom
Dr. Stephanie Prejean, Research Geophysist, USGS
“Forecasting Eruptions at Alaskan Volcanoes: High Stakes Science in Real Time”
11:30-12:30 GeoDaze 2013 Slideshow and Awards
Located in the North Ballroom of the Student Union.
12:30-2:00 EarthWeek/Plenary Poster Session
SUMC South Ballroom
Poster presentations from all EarthWeek participants, including GeoDaze.
2:00-4:00
Plenary Session
SUMC North Ballroom
2:00
WILDFIRE OVER MULTIPLE TIME SCALES: THE DOMINANCE OF
POST-WILDFIRE DENUDATION IN THE LONG-TERM EVOLUTION OF
FORESTED, MOUNTAINOUS LANDSCAPES
Caitlin Orem, GEOS
2:20
CONTINENTAL-SCALE DRIVERS OF WILDFIRE ACTIVITY IN
EASTERN SIBERIA
Christopher Guiterman, LTRR
2:40
INVESTIGATION OF THE ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENTS
ASSOCIATED WITH TROPICAL CYCLONE SIZE CHANGES
Diana Stovern, ATMO
12
3:00
DIRECT PLANTING AS PHYTOSTABILIZATION STRATEGY:
OVERCOMING CHALLENGES IN ACIDIC METALLIFEROUS MINE
TAILINGS IN THE SOUTHWESTERN USA
Juliana Gil-Loaiza, SWES
3:20
SCALING AND EXTREME VALUE ANALYSIS OF HYDROGEOLOGICAL
VARIABLES WITH APPLICATION TO NEUTRON POROSITY DATA IN
OILFIELDS
Tongchao Nan, HYDRO
3:40
CONNECTING CLIMATE IMPACTS TO DECISION MAKING: THE ROAD
LESS TRAVELED
Zack Guido, SNRE
4:00-5:00
Plenary Keynote Address
SUMC North Ballroom
Dr. Marcia McNutt, Editor-in-chief, Science magazine
“Entering the Era of the Geosciences”
6:30-11:00 GeoDaze Dinner Party
Address and map on page 16
13
UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA CAMPUS MAP
STUDENT UNION IS BUILDING No. 19 (BLACK CIRCLE) AND GOULD
SIMSPSON BUILDING No. 77 (BLACK SQUARE)
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!"ʺ#.&,&/#$0"ʺ
1173
1232
1233
2012
2182
1172
1239
1115 420
221
2226
L3/&#C-­‐‑&"ʺ
197
Main Gate
Garage
Visitor &
Permit
Parking
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1224
1237
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1240
!"ʺ#:);&,#$0"ʺ
483
2168
2181
!"ʺ#<4)=71)/#$0"ʺ
433
1
206 205
Misc. Lots: SV, Loading, Disabled
!"ʺ#<4)=71)/#$0"ʺ
212
2165
(M-F 7:00am-4:30pm)
1142
Permit Required
2167
466
Legend:
2236
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2013 - 2014 Campus Parking Map
215
8
14
MAP OF STUDENT UNION
ALL TALKS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE NORTH GRAND BALLROOM
ALL POSTERS WILL BE LOCATED IN THE SOUTH GRAND BALLROOM
15
MAP FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA (A) TO SUE BECK and
GEORGE ZANDT’S HOUSE (B) FOR DINNER PARTY
Dinner service and open bar provided by El Saguarito will begin at 6:30 pm.
16
Fieldtrip
Paleoelevation and tectonic implications of the Oligocene Mineta formation
in the Taran Wash of the San Pedro River Valley
Saturday, April 12, 2014
8 am – 5 pm
http://earth.geo.arizona.edu/geodaze/14/trip.html
Led by Alexis Licht and Ross Waldrip.
The excursion will focus on the Mid Cenozoic (35 - 20 Ma) deposits of the San
Pedro Valley. They consist in two geological units, namely the Mineta and San
Manuel Formations, cropping out extensively in an isolated area only known by
ranchers, on the foothills of the Galiuro Mountains, approximately 1.5 hours east
from Tucson. Both units are unique in documenting the early phases of the
subsidence of the Basin and Range region. They also recorded the almost
complete unroofing of the high-altitude ranges that once connected the Rockies
to the central Mexican highlands, constituting a former 'Mexicanoplano'.
During this fieldtrip, you'll learn about:
• The complex interplay between tectonics, sedimentary supply and
lacustrine deposits
• Paleoaltimetry reconstruction methods
• The Cenozoic (<65 million years) paleotopographic evolution in Arizona
Moreover, you'll have the opportunity to see preserved fossil animal tracks dated
at ~30 million years that are definitely worth the trip.
The GeoDaze Field Trip will leave Saturday, April 12th, 2014 at 8 AM from the
Gould-Simpson loading dock, returning around 5 PM. Lunch boxes from Silver
Mine Subs will be provided. Vegetarian-friendly options are available and can be
requested when registering for GeoDaze.
Transportation
Each participant will have a place reserved in a high-occupancy van or approved
personal vehicle for the full field trip time. Since the trip includes guided-driving
tours we would appreciate that no other vehicles are used for the field trip. Also,
because we have a full day of traveling and tours, please be considerate to other
field trip participants and arrive on time for departure.
17
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